Mapping Processes in the Emergency Department Using the Functional Resonance Analysis Method.

Nathan Anderson, Rajesh G Krishnan,Maneesh Kumar, Tim Ayres,David Slater, Amith Vir Neelakantapuram,Paul Bowie,Andrew Carson-Stevens

Annals of emergency medicine(2023)

Cited 1|Views10
No score
Abstract
Emergency departments (EDs) are dynamic, complex, and demanding environments. Introducing changes that lead to improvements in EDs can be challenging owing to the high staff turnover and mix, high patient volume with different needs, and being the front door to the hospital for the sickest patients. Quality improvement is a methodology applied routinely in EDs to instigate change to improve several outcomes such as waiting times, time to definitive treatment, and patient safety. Introducing the changes needed to transform the system in this way is seldom straightforward with the risk of "not seeing the forest for the trees" when attempting to change the system. In this article, we demonstrate how the functional resonance analysis method can be used to capture the experiences and perceptions of frontline staff to identify the key functions in the system (the trees), to understand the interactions and dependencies between them to make up the ED ecosystem ("the forest") and to support quality improvement planning, identifying priorities and patient safety risks.
More
Translated text
Key words
mapping processes,emergency department,functional,resonance
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined